The Americans were devastated after the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7th, 1941. President Roosevelt signed the Executive Order 9066 on February 19, 1942 sending all Japanese Americans to internment camps. Many Japanese Americans were given very little time to sell everything they had. Many americans treated the Japanese Americans with no respect after the bombing. World War II was the most destructive and deadliest war in history. There were about eleven million people killed just in the holocaust. World War II started on September 1st, 1939 after Germany invaded Poland. Three days later Britain and France declared war on Germany, at the time the U.S. was neutral. Through 1941, germany controlled most of Europe and was a very big threat. …show more content…
All Japanese Americans had to register themselves for the detention camps. Most Japanese Americans were given about two weeks to sell everything and get ready for the detention camps. There were One hundred and twenty thousand Japanese Americans removed to camps in 1942. More than two thirds were american citizens. The U.S. never told the Japanese were they were going. These internment camps were nothing like the Nazi concentration camps, there were no murders in the internment camps, there were millions of murders in the concentration camps but some japanese americans took their own life. The japanese were given much more food than the victims in the concentration …show more content…
They were separated through ten different camps in seven western states. The camps were usually too cold in the winter and too hot in the summer and the camps were usually overcrowded. Soon the Japanese Americans started to plant trees and shrubs around the barracks. Also traditional japanese rock gardens appeared, and they created artificial lakes and lagoons surrounded by vegetation and paths for strolling. (78.) Basketball and touch football were popular as were Ping-Pong, badminton, judo wrestling and boxing. “I think sports were one of the key factors that kept people from going astray.” (84.) Families dined together at mess halls and children attended school, also adults could have the option of working for a salary for five dollars a day. When the Japanese Americans went home all of their belongings and home were destroyed. In 1988 each surviving member received twenty thousand dollars as an apology to these
The Japanese had to go to camps mainly because it was their civil duty. They could not function properly in society because of racism, especially when the Japanese attacked pearl harbor. After the attack nobody trusted Japanese-Americans. The government felt that they needed to protect them from society. Americans had very strong feelings towards these people and there was propaganda made to encourage the withdrawal of Japanese people. Even the creators of looney tune cartoons made an episode of how the Japanese man is a savage and extremely ruthless person to anything. Some episodes were about the Germans as well, and how they train the youth to believe in these horrible things, and growing up
As mentioned earlier, the Japanese Americans during the Second World War faced struggles and problems very different from the struggles of women, Native Americans, and many other people who were living in the the United States. While everyone did have a very hard and difficult time living though all the struggles in the home front, nobody else was discriminated as much as the Japanese were. Just two months after the Japanese flew across the pacific ocean and bombed the Americans at the great attack in Pearl Harbor, President Franklin Roosevelt signed Order 9066 which would order all Japanese Americans to move to the West Coast. More than 120,000 Japanese, a lot of whom were American citizens had to move to one of ten concentration camps that
Unfortunately, the Japanese-Americans living on the west coast were given no time to show what their loyalties were: they were expelled from the area. They were shipped off to remote locations in the more barren sections of the country. The living conditions at the camps were inadequate at best. Residents were forced to endure extreme cold and extreme heat, cramped living spaces, poor meals, and a lack of indoor plumbing. The whole time, they were under the watchful eyes of armed military police. They were treated as prisoners.
The japanese americans were released by their jailers, but the jews had to break out of prison when the americans invaded Germany. It also states in the article Life at the Camps, “In most ways it was a totally equipped American small town, complete with schools, churches, Boy Scouts, beauty parlors, neighborhood gossip, fire and police departments, glee clubs, softball leagues, Abbott and Costello movies, tennis courts, and travelling shows.”, This piece of information tells us that even though the conditions were terrible, the japanese still had it better as the jews were forced to do meaningless labor until they
Over one hundred and ten thousand Japanese individuals were forced into exile in the United States, when Executive Order 9066 was signed. With that, their basic civil liberties were stripped from them. However, in spite of these immense difficulties within the internment camps, the durability and conviction of the human spirit are evident in the former internee Kazuko Itoi and those who had surrounded her. A variety of issues that these people faced ranged from inadequate housing and food, to the inability to keep certain items such as, books written in Japanese which were considered contraband. The Japanese had dealt with living in captivity by means of focusing on religion, creating activities like, calisthenics, and in general attempting to bring a sense of normalcy. For example, building furniture or obtaining jobs like working as a stenographer or hospital help. At their services, their minister Everett Thompson had helped the internees “build the foundation for a new outlook” (Sone, 186), one that was defined by the understanding that their outlook on life had been characterized by bitterness and hostility.
During World War II Americans were very brutal towards the Japanese-Americans.The Japanese made the U.S. prisoners and the U.S. both made prisoners feel dehumanized and isolated. The U.S. soldiers were put in prison camps for fighting the war but the Japanese-Americans were held in internment camps for being descents of Japan and “oppose a threat to the citizens of the U.S.” The U.S. believed that the Japanese-Americans could still be loyal to the Japanese and harm the citizens of the U.S. so they were put in internment camps so that threat would no longer exist. World War II was a war that people were dehumanized and isolated from the outside world.
These were families, workers, children, teachers. They had a short amount of time to sell their property (at a lower price than it’s worth), business, pack their belongings to move to the internment camps. Some people also had to abandon their possessions. Some of their property was raided by the police to get them out. Even after the internment their land and possessions were not returned and they had to start their lives over again. The paranoia and fear were still alive in the Americans after the internment so the Japanese lived in more difficult circumstances. Not till way after the war, the government apologized for their unjust action and paid 20,000 dollars to those who had
Mainly, if the government had supplies to spend on the Japanese who lived in America, they should be spending those supplies to their military, because they ought to protect their own country. If they spend too much on supply for the Japanese, they would not be able to fight back to the Japanese, and the enemy was Japan. So, placing the Japanese into the camps was fair enough for them, because the Japanese should have been arrested by the government.
after attack on Pearl Harbor, people of Japanese ancestry relocated to internment camps; also called relocation camps; ten camps in America; Japanese Americans, mostly U.S. citizens, incarcerated during World War II; ten camps opened over 3 years; eventually held approximately 120,000 people for varying periods in California, Arizona, Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and Arkansas; evacuees only allowed to bring what they could carry; first one called
Very similar to the concentration camps happening in the same time period, Japanese internment camps began during WWII after the bombing of Pearl Harbor. The U.S. government put a lot of Japanese-American citizens in the camps due to the fact that they didn’t want them to turn out to be spies and help take down the U.S. in the war. Even if you were only one- sixteenth Japanese you were taken, this included orphaned children. If you had “one drop of Japanese blood” then you were considered a threat. The camps were dirty and had minimal medical services or resources for education.
The internment camps were very small and overcrowded. They lived in wooden barracks and a large amount people shared it. Inside every apartment it contained cots and blankets to stay warm overnight. There was no privacy at all, they have to share the dining areas, bathroom and dining area. Freedom of religion did exist in this camps, except for the practice of Shinto, a traditional Japanese religion. The camps were very secured, there was no way to get in or out because the fence had barbed wire. In additional, on the towers there were many armed guards. Even they lost many of their rights, kids were still able to go to school and learn. That’s the conditions they lived in until the war ended.
The United State was inflamed by the Japanese after Japan bombed Pearl Harbor. President Roosevelt signed an executive order declaring parts of the western states under military rule after three months of the bombing. Thousands of Japanese-Americans, have to evacuate their houses surrounded by troops. For the rest of the war, these victims were imprisoned in primitive camps(Reeves). During World War II, over 127,000 United States citizens were imprisoned, for being Japanese ancestry. The Japanese Americans were suspected of their loyalty to their ancestral land without any concrete evidences. The evacuation came too quickly before the internment camps had been completed, many of the evacuees were held in temporary centers, such as stables at local racetracks. The conditions in the camps were often miserable due to the diverse climate of being too cold in winter and too hot in summer. The guards would shoot without hesitation if anyone tried to flee. After two and a half years of the executive order, the order was later on repealed. According to ushistory.org, “In 1988, Congress attempted to apologize for the action by awarding each surviving intern $20,000. While the American concentration camps never reached the levels of Nazi death camps as far as atrocities are concerned, they remain a dark mark on the nation's record of respecting civil liberties and cultural
Firstly, Japanese Americans during World War II were displaced from their homes and placed in concentration camps (Takaki,
In the morning of December 7th, 1941, a swarm of Japanese warplanes bombed the Pearl Harbor in a surprise attack. As a result, 2,400 Americans were killed and over a thousand were wounded. The Japanese destroyed over 200 American aircrafts and suck several battleships while only losing under a hundred of their men (History.com). Following this attack, President Franklin D. Roosevelt declared war on Japan, officially entering World War II. Fearing that the Japanese Americans would turn on America and aid Japan, Roosevelt signed an executive order that forced all Japanese Americans to evacuate the West Coast. Approximately 120,000 Japanese were relocated to internment camps. Because of the safety of the country and the Japanese, I believe that the United States government was justified for interning Japanese Americans.
Two months after the bombing on Pearl Harbor, on February 19 of 1942, president Roosevelt put in act Executive Order 9066, which made is so that all Japanese-Americans were in evacuate the West Coast (History.com 2009). This led to the relocation of almost 120,000 people, a majority being American citizens (History.com 2009). This relocation of Japanese-Americans came with terrible living standards which are able to be compared to the concentration camps used by the Nazis in WWII, American citizens being blamed for an attack they didn’t commit due to their race, and what some may say is the most important for the future of the United States, the stories of the brave that survived.